First Look: Cool-er Ebook Reader
Dec. 2nd, 2009 09:44 pmI've been looking at readers for a few weeks, and today had a play in The Shoppe and succumbed to the Cool-er. Mostly because I think a reader should be fairly invisible, a portal not a gadget, and the competition (the Sony PRS-300 Pocket Reader) was much too cluttered with buttons around the page. I got both devices in my hand and it was a no-brainer.
The Cool-er fits my "magic size and shape" - a DVD case. It's a little narrower and slimmer, and weighs exactly the same as a DVD in its box - ie, bugger-all. The Sony was much more of a Quality Gadget - Sony don't make anything else - but it was heavier and thicker and just more gadgety. It's a thing of beauty and Sony fans will be righteous in their love, but I don't even want to see the reader, let alone squee over it.
The Cool-er also does HTML which the Sony doesn't, and quiet a bit of my stuff is HTML.
There's no software with it: you manage it all with file folders or you get Adobe Digital Editions for the DRM stuff (yeah, riiiight). That suits me just fine. Charging is handled through the USB cable, so it should charge fine from ad-hoc USB chargers like the FreeLoader if you need to.
It takes SD cards up to 4Gb, which is total overkill for books but not for PDFs which get hefty - if you're a PDF slut like me, this is ace. The crazy-toothed survivalist library can easily tuck in one corner of a big SD card without getting in the way, waiting the zombie apocalypse.
Graphics are okay - 8 greys, very rich PDFs look a bit arse (zines no, papers with graphs yes). Page turns are fast for its class.
The Cool-er fits my "magic size and shape" - a DVD case. It's a little narrower and slimmer, and weighs exactly the same as a DVD in its box - ie, bugger-all. The Sony was much more of a Quality Gadget - Sony don't make anything else - but it was heavier and thicker and just more gadgety. It's a thing of beauty and Sony fans will be righteous in their love, but I don't even want to see the reader, let alone squee over it.
The Cool-er also does HTML which the Sony doesn't, and quiet a bit of my stuff is HTML.
There's no software with it: you manage it all with file folders or you get Adobe Digital Editions for the DRM stuff (yeah, riiiight). That suits me just fine. Charging is handled through the USB cable, so it should charge fine from ad-hoc USB chargers like the FreeLoader if you need to.
It takes SD cards up to 4Gb, which is total overkill for books but not for PDFs which get hefty - if you're a PDF slut like me, this is ace. The crazy-toothed survivalist library can easily tuck in one corner of a big SD card without getting in the way, waiting the zombie apocalypse.
Graphics are okay - 8 greys, very rich PDFs look a bit arse (zines no, papers with graphs yes). Page turns are fast for its class.